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Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Tue, 30 May 2000 12:00:00 GMT
John L. Kane, Jr. - Acceptance Speech for "The Justice Gerald LeDain Award For the Achievement in the Field of Law": Reminds us of the indirect victims of the war on some drugs, all those who would have benefitted from police work that didn't happen due to time spent apprehending people for possessing vegetables. Good speech!

I don't know where all the hits are coming from, but End the War on Freedom got 631 hits yesterday. I passed View from an Iowa Homestead and moved up to position 31 on the editthispage.com Top 100 Page Reads page. Yet only 58 people read my home page yesterday, 10 of which were me doing updates. Search engines?

Dave Polaschek has some good insights in yesterday's issue of Dave's Picks. Reminds me of L. Neil Smith's Atlanta Declaration in which he says:

... like going to the bathroom, breathing, eating, sleeping, or making love, it turns out that self-defense is a bodily function one cannot safely or effectively delegate to a second party.

I was at my friend Richard's house for a Memorial Day barbecue yesterday afternoon. Richard was shot 15 years ago by some punk in New York City. It is a miracle that he survived. None of the doctors know how he did it. His guts were scrambled. He doesn't like guns, doesn't want anyone to have them. I don't blame him. I don't like guns either, and if I knew of a way to make them disappear from the face of the planet, I'd do it. But I don't. I told him that part of me is a pacifist. If you are a pacifist and someone points a gun at your son, you have to be willing to watch him die. Richard said that he's not a pacifist. Neither am I. At least not as long as I have children. I could watch myself die, but I can't watch one of my kids die. Not if there's a way I can stop it.

While going through L. Neil's Lever Action Essays, trying to find the source for the quote above I came upon this Letter to a Bureaucrat. I would not want L. Neil's anger pointed in my direction.

Isaac Guzman at New York Daily News - Zippity Brouhaha: Scooter enthusiasts don't want a ticket to ride: Claims it was a traffic ticket for riding his motorized scooter in NYC that finally pushed Bob Armstrong to run for congress. Here's a picture I took of Bob at the Millennium Marijuana March (click on it for a bigger version). [market]

"BobArmStrong1OfTheGoodGuys000506-240x320"

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